Project Manager - Water/Wastewater Treatment
Position Description
At River City Construction, Project Managers for our Water/Wastewater treatment projects play a critical role in delivering essential infrastructure that serves communities. These leaders guide projects from preconstruction through closeout, working closely with field teams, engineers, design consultants, and facility owners to ensure work is delivered safely, on schedule, within budget, and in full compliance with regulatory requirements.
Why This Role Is Different
Compared to typical vertical or commercial building projects, water and wastewater work offers:
This is complex, technical infrastructure work that requires leadership, sound judgment, and collaboration across disciplines.
This role is well-suited for engineering-minded professionals, including civil, mechanical, electrical, environmental, or construction engineers, who enjoy being deeply involved in both design coordination and construction execution. It is particularly attractive to EITs and early-career Project Engineers who want more responsibility, broader exposure, and closer involvement in decision-making than is typically available in large design firms.
Our water and wastewater projects often involve active treatment facilities, incomplete or outdated as-builts, evolving site conditions, and operational constraints. Unique project elements may include deep excavations requiring earth retention, rock excavation, tight site logistics, maintaining plant operations throughout construction, and integration of specialized, custom process equipment. These conditions create opportunities for contractor-led design coordination, real-time problem solving, and meaningful collaboration with owners and engineers of record.
Project Managers are expected to understand the full picture of their projects, including process systems, heavy concrete structures, civil works, structural components, electrical systems, and controls integration, while independently managing priorities and leading teams that may include superintendents, foremen, engineers, safety staff, procurement professionals, and subcontractors. Project Managers may also support pursuit efforts by building relationships with municipal clients, utility districts, and design consultants.
Key Responsibilities
Collaborate with fellow Project Managers, Superintendents, Field Operations, and company leadership to deliver high-performing water and wastewater infrastructure projects. Ensure compliance with environmental regulations, permits, and utility coordination requirements while maintaining safety and quality standards.
Support contractor-led design coordination efforts for treatment plant projects, including reviewing submittals, coordinating with equipment vendors, and assisting with modifications to structural, civil, electrical, process piping, hydraulic, and controls layouts. Participate in design discussions and help present proposed solutions to owners and engineers of record.
Manage budgets, procurement, forecasting, job costs, cash flow, RFIs, and change management on technically complex scopes. Treatment projects often involve greater uncertainty, requiring proactive issue identification and collaborative problem solving.
Work closely with the Superintendent to coordinate daily activities, document progress, resolve issues, and keep the team aligned. Support field teams on challenges unique to water/wastewater construction, such as bypass pumping, confined space work, dewatering, maintaining plant operations, and large cast-in-place concrete placements.
Serve as a primary point of contact for municipal clients, utility districts, engineering partners, and vendors. Build trust through responsiveness, technical understanding, and a collaborative, solutions-oriented approach.
Oversee QA/QC documentation, permitting requirements, submittals, and closeout activities. Ensure environmental and safety compliance throughout the project lifecycle.
Work Environment
We offer a flexible work environment that supports team members in balancing work and life while meeting project needs.
Water and wastewater treatment projects vary in complexity and client requirements. While many assignments allow for a hybrid schedule (often including onsite presence several days per week), certain projects , particularly active treatment plant work or complex pursuits , may require a full-time onsite Project Manager for the duration of the assignment.
Work location expectations will be clearly defined prior to assignment, and Project Managers are expected to adapt their presence based on project phase, operational constraints, and client needs.
To support field leadership responsibilities and project-related travel, a monthly vehicle allowance of $775 is provided. In addition, gas mileage is reimbursed at the applicable GSA rate.
Compensation & Benefits
RCC offers a competitive benefits package including:
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